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WWE SmackDown Results — February 07, 2025
Full WWE SmackDown results for February 07, 2025 in Memphis, Tennessee. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.
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February 07, 2025 — Memphis, Tennessee
Event Recap
Friday night’s SmackDown in Memphis felt like a proper adrenaline pitstop on the road to Elimination Chamber, with qualifiers, surprises, and one hell of a chaotic ending that left jaws on the floor. Jey Uso rolled into town riding his Royal Rumble victory high and by the time the night closed you could feel the momentum building for WrestleMania, even if parts of the show were a bit padded.
The women’s side kicked off with Bianca Belair using pure strength to pin Piper Niven, punching her ticket into the Elimination Chamber match, then Alexa Bliss showed zero ring rust in her first singles action in two years by nailing Candice LeRae with Sister Abigail to also qualify. Tag team chaos followed as Pretty Deadly shockingly upended #DIY in a non-title bout, reminding everyone why you don’t blink on SmackDown.
The men’s Chamber qualifier was a decent barn-burner: Drew McIntyre returned to the blue brand and out-slugged LA Knight and Jimmy Uso in a triple threat to earn his spot, courtesy of a Claymore clean finish. ([turn1search0]) Carmelo Hayes took care of Akira Tozawa in a fairly straightforward match right after.
Cody Rhodes and Jey Uso then teamed up to take down Jacob Fatu & Tama Tonga, and just when you think the night’s over, Solo Sikoa made a jaw-dropping return and Samoan-Spiked Cody right as the camera cut — exactly the kind of heat that gets people yelling at their TVs. Even with a few spots feeling familiar, SmackDown delivered solid qualifiers, crowd moments, and a main-event swerve that ramps the hype for the next stop toward WrestleMania.
Match Results
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On match card: +1
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Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
Summary
Bianca Belair brought all that Athlet-Belt-Vibe to her Elimination Chamber qualifying match with Piper Niven, and from bell to finish she looked like she meant business. Niven wasn’t just there to stand around — she bulldozed Belair with power shots and crisp reversals early on, and there were a few ooh-that-almost-ended-it moments that had the crowd popping. In the end, though, Belair’s strength and lightning-fast counters earned her the pinfall over Piper, sending the EST into Elimination Chamber with momentum on her side. It was the kind of match that makes you go “yeah, she deserves that spot,” even if part of you was low-key rooting for the upset.
Summary
What a weird turn of events here — Pretty Deadly (Elton Prince & Kit Wilson) managed to take down DIY (Johnny Gargano & Tommaso Ciampa) in a non-title tag bout that felt like a mid-week screener match but delivered actual teeth. DIY brought their gritty strikes and tag-team craft, but Pretty Deadly’s chemistry and opportunistic pinning brought the win. It wasn’t a classic chest-thumping moment, but when Wilson hit a well-timed roll-up to score the fall, you could hear the “WTF?!” in the crowd. It’s the kind of match where you’re happy for the underdogs but simultaneously like “seriously?” — which, honestly, makes SmackDown feel a bit unpredictable in a good way.
Final
Pinfall
Summary
This one was the big meat of the show: a triple threat qualifier to punch a ticket into the Elimination Chamber on the men’s side. Drew McIntyre, LA Knight, and Jimmy Uso all unloaded their signature weapons of choice — Claymores, BFTs, superkicks, and all the chaos you’d expect from three heavy hitters in one ring. Each guy looked like he could clinch it at different points, but when the smoke cleared Drew McIntyre stood tall with the pinfall after some crisp, hard-charging offense. McIntyre looked like the Scottish Terminator you remember from his best nights — serious with a side of “don’t sleep on me.” Knight and Uso weren’t bad at all, but Drew got the job done and earned his Chamber position in solid fashion.
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Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
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On match card: +1
Summary
Carmelo Hayes came out with swagger and slick moves against Akira Tozawa, and this match had that “flash + logic” mix we see from Hayes a lot. Tozawa brought his relentless intensity and explosive offense early — hitting dives and rapid fire kicks that kept Hayes honest — but eventually Hayes’ ring savvy and athletic counters made the difference. A well-timed nothing starts until I walk in-style flurry let Hayes land the decisive maneuver and get the pin. It was the kind of match that makes you think “Tozawa made Hayes work for it,” which is actually pretty cool for both guys involved.
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On match card: +1
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
Summary
The hype was real for Alexa Bliss’ first singles match in over two years, and she made it count against Candice LeRae. From her entrance to her final taunt, Bliss carried that signature mischievous energy — and she backed it up in the ring too. LeRae wasn’t some patsy here; she brought a gritty, grounded fight that made Bliss earn every second of offense. Still, Bliss’ craftiness and clutch execution — including hitting a version of Sister Abigail we haven’t seen in a bit — sealed the pinfall victory. The crowd seemed genuinely into this one, and it was a satisfying re-entry into singles competition for Bliss.
Main Event
Summary
In what was supposed to be the big ending, Cody Rhodes and Jey Uso teamed up to take on Tama Tonga & Jacob Fatu, and this tag clash hit hard and fast. There were classic smashes, near-falls, and Fatu just bulldozing folks like only he can. Cody and Jey traded counters and high-impact spots, showing big show energy, and they ultimately got the win in the conventional tag outing. But, of course, the night really popped afterward when Solo Sikoa returned out of nowhere and delivered a Samoan Spike to Cody Rhodes, putting everyone on notice and leaving the crowd yelling at their screens. It was a winning overall match, but the post-bell heat was the real headline here.

















